I tried searching for "head space" and "krausen" on this forum (i am used to making beer) and couldnt find anything.
Long story short, i have made a few country wines, 1 6-gal batch of skeeter pee, and 1 wine kit so far. I have also brewed 7 batches of beer. Yesterday my buddy and i went to m&m grapes in hartford, ct and bought a 6.5 gallon pail of 2011 fresh crushed chilean merlot must. Here are my questions concerning it:
-queston 1-
Here's the question. There is a bout 2" of head space in the bucket. Is that enough room for the fermentation? Or should i scoop some of the must out after i add the yeast into a smaller bucket? How much head space is typicaly needed for fermentation? Does the must have a really high krausen? Do you call it krausen in wine as well as beer?
-question 2-
The must is currently at 55 degrees and i have a brew belt on the bucket trying to get it up to pitching temps, it's beer over 24hrs since i got the bucket but the temps last night were 40 degrees (far too cold for the yeast to get going) Would it hurt to add the yeast at 58-60 degrees and mix it in? Will the yeast survive that kind of temperature change (currently they are room temp)? I am pitching optired & d254. I plan on putting the yeast and optired into seperate small dishes to rehydrate and adding them within an hour of each other or so. The wine will be fermenting in the basement so it will be at a comfy 68-70 degrees.
-question 3-
I had two contradicting opinions on the pressing and adding of malolactic cultures. One person said for merlot grapes i should press the must at 5 days then add the cultures (only if needed), the other person said i should add the cultures when there is 6brix left and then press the grapes the next day they did not mention "only if needed". I understand a lot of the winemaking process is based upon personal methods and such, and neither way seems wrong... I am looking to make this merlot as fruit forward as possible. I also don't mind a heavy tannin wine (and my wine making partner prefers them) so i wouldnt mind going out of the "style" of merlot by leaving the must for a few days longer before pressing to get more tannins... Are there any personal/scientific suggestions for this?
-question 4-
We bought french medium toasted oak chips for the wine. The package says to use 1/3 cup for 5 gallons of wine. It was suggested that we use a bit less in the merlot, but no length of time was mentioned. I dont mind letting this wine bulk age for 6-12 months before bottling, but am not sure if the oak should be in there that long?
I know i am jumping into this hobby feet first, but it is truly something i have been wanting to do for years (didnt have the space/time) and something i am enjoying thoroughly. I know i skipped a few steps like making more wines from kits and buying just juice, but i am pretty confident and i think i just need to get my hands dirty and do something rather then contemplate the next step anymore.
Long story short, i have made a few country wines, 1 6-gal batch of skeeter pee, and 1 wine kit so far. I have also brewed 7 batches of beer. Yesterday my buddy and i went to m&m grapes in hartford, ct and bought a 6.5 gallon pail of 2011 fresh crushed chilean merlot must. Here are my questions concerning it:
-queston 1-
Here's the question. There is a bout 2" of head space in the bucket. Is that enough room for the fermentation? Or should i scoop some of the must out after i add the yeast into a smaller bucket? How much head space is typicaly needed for fermentation? Does the must have a really high krausen? Do you call it krausen in wine as well as beer?
-question 2-
The must is currently at 55 degrees and i have a brew belt on the bucket trying to get it up to pitching temps, it's beer over 24hrs since i got the bucket but the temps last night were 40 degrees (far too cold for the yeast to get going) Would it hurt to add the yeast at 58-60 degrees and mix it in? Will the yeast survive that kind of temperature change (currently they are room temp)? I am pitching optired & d254. I plan on putting the yeast and optired into seperate small dishes to rehydrate and adding them within an hour of each other or so. The wine will be fermenting in the basement so it will be at a comfy 68-70 degrees.
-question 3-
I had two contradicting opinions on the pressing and adding of malolactic cultures. One person said for merlot grapes i should press the must at 5 days then add the cultures (only if needed), the other person said i should add the cultures when there is 6brix left and then press the grapes the next day they did not mention "only if needed". I understand a lot of the winemaking process is based upon personal methods and such, and neither way seems wrong... I am looking to make this merlot as fruit forward as possible. I also don't mind a heavy tannin wine (and my wine making partner prefers them) so i wouldnt mind going out of the "style" of merlot by leaving the must for a few days longer before pressing to get more tannins... Are there any personal/scientific suggestions for this?
-question 4-
We bought french medium toasted oak chips for the wine. The package says to use 1/3 cup for 5 gallons of wine. It was suggested that we use a bit less in the merlot, but no length of time was mentioned. I dont mind letting this wine bulk age for 6-12 months before bottling, but am not sure if the oak should be in there that long?
I know i am jumping into this hobby feet first, but it is truly something i have been wanting to do for years (didnt have the space/time) and something i am enjoying thoroughly. I know i skipped a few steps like making more wines from kits and buying just juice, but i am pretty confident and i think i just need to get my hands dirty and do something rather then contemplate the next step anymore.